It was the first hackathon for quite a lot of people, and it was great to see people getting involved in an event they might not otherwise attend. Tickets for the event were sorted into several types:

Developers (the majority of the tickets)

UX/Designer

Non-technical

People were encouraged to form teams of about 5 people – 3 developers, 1 ux person, and one non technical – with the goal that your devs can build, the UX person makes it look amazing, and your non-technical person can coordinate and concentrate on your presentation (following excellent advice laid out by Kris just a month ago on presenting your hackathon project.)

I was also amazed at the generous catering – pizza, caffeine, snacks, lots of cookies made by team mate Denise, and a decidedly un-male breakfast spread of yoghurt, muesli and fresh-cut fruit!

The result? 50 women in 11 teams competed for some great prizes donated by Google, Atlassian, Microsoft and Razorfish. There were some fantastic team hacks presented, and I personally enjoyed:

Mini Jobs – finding odd jobs for younger people to do to boost their confidence/skills and earn some pocket money

Share the Paw Paw – crowdsourcing locations around your neighbourhood where fruit and vegetables are freely available, or if you have a surplus to give away

Coffee Run – formalising coffee rounds in the office, including keeping tabs of who owes who

HOWEVER… our team of Denise Fernandez, Luciana Carrolo, Kim Chatterjee, Anna Zaitsev and myself won first prize with our “Mission Possible” app!! The site is designed to connect volunteers with coordinators to assist with disaster relief. The amazing prezi designed by Anna and Kim describes the idea in detail.

The source code is available on GitHub. The app was designed to be realtime so that volunteers can see up-to-the-minute information about where their help is needed, and in our demo we used two screens to great effect (realtime updates are always a crowd pleaser!). It was written using node, socket.io, handlebars, google maps, twitter bootstrap and a lovely set of custom icons designed by Kim.

A screenshot from our app shows a shaded area where the “disaster” has occurred (an oil spill), and a point which is the muster point for volunteers to go to to help (save the penguins!). Everything updated in real time from a master coordinator, who would add extra muster points and specify numbers of volunteers that should be at each point.

Our prize was a Nexus 7 tablet and a 3D printed trophy, which was a pink computer.

I was pretty happy with the outcome of that! It’s the third hackathon in a year that I’ve participated in and won prizes for. I really love the energy and creativity that comes out of such an intense situation, and it’s a lot of fun to see what everyone else does in such a short time as well.